Passwords are a pain

...that didn’t require users to remember a password. We tried using codes instead of links. Send the user a code, user enters a code to access the website. But we...
...that didn’t require users to remember a password. We tried using codes instead of links. Send the user a code, user enters a code to access the website. But we...
...or nothing to write accessible code. Good quality code is better to collaborate on, iterate and inherit. And changing code later can cause problems, higher costs and delays. Accessible services...
...users before going into the code. To avoid such issues it’s important that you keep a close eye on the agile board, so you’re aware of the stories that will...
...that promotes openness, participation and ownership. You'll need to maintain a keen awareness of technology as well as Home Office policy and processes. You'll work closely with the business and...
...advantage of advances in technology and the latest engineering patterns. A new ‘continuous integration pipeline’ lets developers release and test small changes to the code. This ensures we can deploy...
...while retraining for a specialist role as a software developer. The apprenticeship journey The apprenticeship started with a 3 month bootcamp where I learned how to code and culminated in...
...the Home Office there is at least one firm stake in the ground. People are working on cutting edge stuff: Kubernetes, Docker, Terraform and Amazon Web Service (AWS) across a...
...coding and prototyping, but a lot of new designers and non-design colleagues wanted to code and make their own prototypes, but had no idea where to start. There was a...
...that are easy to use and understand. They’ll prototype these solutions – often in code because interactions are made of code, not mock-ups – to test ideas with users and...
...make matches to accommodation offers and to services in Local Authorities. We reused code from another service, which gave us a head-start. We built the service in an agile way,...
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